Dengue
13th March 2017, 06:37 PM
I am going to try tung oil for the first time as an experiment, to see if it gives a good deep finish to some Northern Silky Oak with some nice rays and grain. From reading and Googling, here is what I think is the way to apply it.
Trying this because it supposedly doesn't give a yellow finish on the lighter woods ( unlike linseed oil finishes) and it is supposed to be water resistant, and dries to a hard surface.
Can anyone who has used it please correct me? Or tell me if you thinks any steps are a waster of time?
Suggested Application process
1 Sand to 400 grit.
2. Apply a shellac sanding sealer, 1:5 parts metho, to fill the pores of the oak, and lightly sand off with 600 grit paper
3. Apply 30:70 (tung oil: Citrus turpene or eucalyptus gum). Apply liberally, keep wet for 15 minutes for it to penetrate the oak, and then wipe off. Keep wiping any oil bleeds every hour over the next 8 hours. Leave dry thoroughly for at least 24-48 hrs until there is no smell.
4. Apply 50:50 coat, same procedure, leave to dry thoroughly
5. Apply another 50:50 coat, applied with 0000 steel wool, to give a satin finish.
6. Leave to properly cure for 4 weeks
7. Apply UBeaut Ultra Shine cutting paste, let dry for 30 minutes, buff off
8. Apply UBeaut Traditonal Wax, let dry, buff off.
With all this work and lengthy curing time, I can understand why people prefer the likes of Kunos #244 oil by Livos, getting the same result within 3 days. Or is it the same quality as tung oil finish?
Looking forward to hearing of the ways others use tung oil , and if it gives a really outstanding finish that makes grain pop?
Trying this because it supposedly doesn't give a yellow finish on the lighter woods ( unlike linseed oil finishes) and it is supposed to be water resistant, and dries to a hard surface.
Can anyone who has used it please correct me? Or tell me if you thinks any steps are a waster of time?
Suggested Application process
1 Sand to 400 grit.
2. Apply a shellac sanding sealer, 1:5 parts metho, to fill the pores of the oak, and lightly sand off with 600 grit paper
3. Apply 30:70 (tung oil: Citrus turpene or eucalyptus gum). Apply liberally, keep wet for 15 minutes for it to penetrate the oak, and then wipe off. Keep wiping any oil bleeds every hour over the next 8 hours. Leave dry thoroughly for at least 24-48 hrs until there is no smell.
4. Apply 50:50 coat, same procedure, leave to dry thoroughly
5. Apply another 50:50 coat, applied with 0000 steel wool, to give a satin finish.
6. Leave to properly cure for 4 weeks
7. Apply UBeaut Ultra Shine cutting paste, let dry for 30 minutes, buff off
8. Apply UBeaut Traditonal Wax, let dry, buff off.
With all this work and lengthy curing time, I can understand why people prefer the likes of Kunos #244 oil by Livos, getting the same result within 3 days. Or is it the same quality as tung oil finish?
Looking forward to hearing of the ways others use tung oil , and if it gives a really outstanding finish that makes grain pop?